Light Painting Artist Mafu Fuma and the production team from Movinapes have just released part two of their Light Painting Documentary Series “The Path Of Light”! This series is beautifully produced from people who truly understand the Light Painting art form and the community that has grown out of it! Bravo to Mafu and the Movinapes team. Brilliant work capturing the feeling of light painting! Enjoy… Click here for part one if you missed it.

In this new light painting video I show the difference in the Opaque and Translucent Light Writers. This is one of the most common questions I get about the Light Painting Brushes Light Painting Tools, How it helps 🙂 Enjoy:

Here is latest episode of the Light Painting Photography VLOG. There isn’t much Light Painting in this episode of the VLOG but I wanted to share the experience anyway because I think there is still some good stuff in here. It just goes to show that things don’t always work out like you plan especially when you are trying to creating Light Paintings in places you have never been before. The next episode has lots of light painting in it I promise… If you have not subscribed to our YouTube channel yet please do it NOW! This episode was filmed in Golden and Estes Colorado at the Stanley Hotel where they filmed some of The Shining! Enjoy…

Light Painting Photographer Dee Light specializes in a form of light drawing known as Light Calligraphy. I had the pleasure of meeting and shooting with Dee about a year ago and to see him create is work in real life is something special. His movements are smooth and elegant and I was really impressed with his general spacial awareness and the way he moved his lights through the air. Dee has created a nice video tutorial showing how he creates his Light Calligraphy along with some help from fellow Light Painting Artist Chanette Manso, check it out below!

A new website created by Light Painting Artist Dan Chick and Gunnar Heilmann has just been released to the world! The website LightPainters.com is all about connecting Light Painting Artist with each other along with various other opportunities! One of my favorite features of the website is the interactive map showing where other artists are located, everywhere in the world! This is such a great feature for a traveling artist that is looking to collaborate away from home!

There has been a massive amount of work that has gone into building this website for the community so please go to LightPainters.com create your profile, check out all the awesome features and don’t forget to throw Dan and Gunnar a Thank You for all the countless hours that went into building this for our community!

Light Painting Photographer Kirk Edwards recently shared a pretty cool Light Painting project called “Cooking Up Something Light” These images were pretty unique and not something I had seen before so I reached out to Kirk to find out a little bit more!

Hey Kirk I recently saw your images from Cooking up something Light! Those are really cool can you tell me a little bit more about these images where did this idea come from? Thanks, Jason! While I can’t remember the exact “Aha!” moment that made me think to try putting lights on a Kitchen Aid attachment, I can tell you that ever since this little parasite called light painting took hold of my brain I find my self constantly playing the “what if” game. You know the “what if” game, right? For example, you’re cleaning your kid’s room and come across one of their light up toys and you think “Hmmm.. what if I take that twelve dollar Star Wars light saber and wave it behind a model on a Lyra ring? That might be really cool?” Then you try it and the result is even better than you had imagined. Next thing you know you’re stealing every toy from your kid that has a light on it and writing it off as photography gear.

Back to the Kitchen Aid, I’ve always liked spirographs ever since I watched your How-To video a couple years ago, and I’ve done my fair share of them over the years. But I think it’s important to progress as an artist and to try to avoid doing the same thing over and over. So the Kitchen Aid idea was just another “what if” moment applied to an old concept. Really love how they turned out.

They are really cool and YES I know the What If game very well, lol… It looks like a holiday light string, is that what you used to create these images?Yes, they are called “Fairy Lights” on Amazon. They are basically a group of tiny LEDs on a bendable copper wire. Super affordable and very versatile.

How did you get the lights to stay on the Mixer?For the paddle attachment, once I decided where I wanted the lights the go I just used small pieces of gaffers tape to hold them in place. Then I bundled up the extra length along with the power supply and taped them somewhere out of the way, making sure to conceal any extra lights. Same for the dough hook.

Did you modify the mixer at all to get it to work?No modifications were needed this time around. But I’ve already got a whole slew of “what if’s” swirling around for next time.

Oh I bet you do! Are you planning on creating more images like these and expanding the series?The feedback from these has been so positive that I am already planning on creating a series of additional images to accompany these. So stay tuned;)

Where can we see more of your work and stay tunned?All of my work can be seen on my Instagram @_kirkae. Website coming soon.

Great man, thank you for tanking the time to share these images! I am sure they will inspire some other creatives to tape lights to their kitchen appliances!

UPDATE: After much support from the Light Painting Photography Community as well as a few big guns like PetaPixel and DIYPhotography sharing Tim’s story 500PX has put Tim’s account back online like nothing ever happened. There are two things that I take from this the first is that the Light Painting Community is awesome and we have a lot of work to do to educate the masses about the magic we make in camera!

Light Painting Photographer Tim Gamble, a.k.a. Fade To Black Light Art, has had his account removed from photo website giant 500px for posting “non-photographic” content. This is pretty ironic considering that Tim’s work is created 99% in camera, I am pretty sure that would meet the requirements of being a photograph. Unfortunately 500PX didn’t give Tim a chance to plead his case or to show that his work is indeed created using a camera, they instead simply deleted his account. I often look at Tim’s Light Painting Photography and can’t wrap my head around how he creates his work in camera, I guess I am not the only one… I reached out to Tim to find out what happened…

Hey Tim I just saw your post on getting your account removed for posting “NON-Photographic Content” from one of the world’s largest photography platforms 500PX That is pretty insane considering all your images are photographs!Lets go ahead and clear this up, how do you create your images? What is the main instrument that you use to create your images, I am guessing its a Camera? That’s correct I use my camera to record the light I place in the frame. I have various tools I use in conjunction with my camera such as my Light Painting Brushes, my Camera Rotation Tool and Lens Swapping which can lead to some crazy results.

How much of your work is illustration or graphic design created on a computer?I’d say 99% of my work is created in camera during a single long exposure with some Lightroom edits to the raw file. Sometimes I like to create double exposures in P.S. for some of my 365 project shots but they are described as such and are few and far between and I wouldn’t classify them as graphic design or an illustration as the above there are more a digital double exposure.

Did someone report you as in another 500PX user, or was it the moderators of the website itself? Did you get any clarification on what happened?I got no clarification really. I was told via email, after I had asked the question about my account, that another user could have reported me for posting non photographic content. That is fine with me as to the untrained eye that’s exactly what you would think. Im annoyed that my profile was deleted without any communication from 500px.

Was there one image in particular that made them think that your images were not created in camera?Again I’m not sure, although from memory I think the last image I uploaded there was one called shrunken head. An in camera double exposure created with the help of Chris Thompson involving a lens swap, lasers and a silhouette.

I have also been using some 3d video files very kindly shared with me by Hugo Baptista in conjunction with ICM. The resulting images from which look very much like cgi.

Holy crap those are insane, I’ve got to say I could see how its hard to understand that these are created in camera! What a shame that your work wasn’t celebrated and featured for how amazing it is! How long had you had your 500PX account? I’d had my account for a long time and even had an editors choice from Eric Pare when he was guest editor which is kind of ironic.

Wow that is pretty ironic! I guess when Eric was the guest editor he understood how extraordinary your Light Painting Photography work really is! Did they give you any sort of warning, or did they just pull your account?The first I knew was when I was filling in a profile for a new project and checked to see I had written my 500px account correctly. I clicked the link I had created and it lead me to a page saying this account no longer exists. I thought I’d been hacked at first but then I got email confirmation yesterday from 500px saying it had been deleted.

Were you a premium member, and if so are you going to get a refund?Not a premium member but some of my images are on Getty via 500px which again is quite amusing.

Did you appeal the removal of your account? I’m in the process of doing so but my last correspondence from them stated that my profile won’t be reinstated.

Did you offer to prove that your images were actually created in camera?Considering they have all the exif data there attached to my images already I’m not sure they are to bothered.

I think the best way to take it is as a huge compliment in that your images are so damn good that they can’t comprehend that they are actually created in camera, How are you feeling about it? As you said it feels like quite a compliment and I’m not angry. It’s unsurprising that to the untrained eye they appear to be created in a non photographic manner although you would have thought that on a platform such as theirs someone would have the first idea as to what light painting is.. The one thing which leaves a sour taste in my mouth is the fact they deleted it without at least asking me or giving warning. What if I used 500px as a method of storing my images and that suddenly were to dissappear.

Well hopefully this will turn into something good for you! I sincerely hope that your talent to create images in your camera are so mind boggling people can’t understand them is shared and given the recognition it deserves rather than being taken down from websites for being too damn good! The removal of your account is really something special in good and bad way…Thank you!

I have recently been informed of a website that has copied and pasted what has taken me months of work to compile with out giving any credit or a link back to the site. I am building this website for the promotion of light painting photography and the artist involved in the movement as well as a resource for light painters and those who are interested in our art form. We are all inspired by the work of other light painters, other writers, other photographers, and other artist in general. I don’t agree with Pablo Picasso when he said “Good artist copy, Great artist steal”. The point is….. PLEASE spread the word about light painting photography and feel free to use anything on this site, copy and paste it if you want, just give credit where credit is due! If you use photos from an artist give the artist credit and a link back to their website. If you copy and paste the entire history of light painting page to create a page on your own website be sure to say where you got it from! Light painting photography has a very close community, we know who is putting in the work and who is not.

Light Painting Brushes Awesome Light Painting Tools.

Please Support The Companies That Support Our Art Form, Click a Logo!

About LPP Founder Jason D. Page

My name is Jason D. Page and I am a light painter. LightPaintingPhotography.com was born out of my passion and obsession with light painting photography. I have been a photographer since the late 1990’s and even before that I have had images in my brain that I wanted to … [Read More...]

The winner for the Light Writing contest is… Hugo Lomas Fernandez, a.k.a. SFHIR for this excellent light writing that also included a camera rotation! SFHIR said this about his winning image! Whooooow great news! Thank you very much, Im very happy to win at my first picture in a contest. The picture was created at […]